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author | Alon Zakai <azakai@mozilla.com> | 2011-01-20 23:03:08 -0800 |
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committer | Alon Zakai <azakai@mozilla.com> | 2011-01-20 23:03:08 -0800 |
commit | 82c8f1f7a5388fc322445ed899801d6ece8ced5a (patch) | |
tree | be8835dd47ff5bd8ca3acc630a38079eaad9f394 /docs | |
parent | 5fe04609c3192717c8eff9b238967cb9a86d57c1 (diff) |
paper update
Diffstat (limited to 'docs')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/paper.tex | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/paper.tex b/docs/paper.tex index 279b9841..ae5537c3 100644 --- a/docs/paper.tex +++ b/docs/paper.tex @@ -98,9 +98,9 @@ browsers, by compiling one's language of choice into JavaScript, one can still generate content that will run practically everywhere. Examples of this approach include the Google Web Toolkit, which compiles Java into JavaScript; Pyjamas, which compiles Python into JavaScript; -and rumors have it that projects in Oracle and Microsoft, respectively, -allow running JVM and CLR bytecode in JavaScript (which would allow -running the languages of the JVM and CLR, respectively). +Script\# and jsc, % http://jsc.sourceforge.net/ +which compile .NET assemblies into JavaScript; and there are rumors +about an Oracle project to translate JVM bytecode into JavaScript. In this paper we present another project along those lines: \textbf{Emscripten}, which compiles LLVM assembly into JavaScript. LLVM (Low Level Virtual |